In Hollywood, talk about diversity is the new black: Every day there’s another study, painting a new, often discouraging picture.

But the sheer number of studies, overwhelming as they are, may lead to fatigue that keeps people from reading them. And that’s an incredible shame, because individually and collectively, they provide Hollywood insights — and direction — into how to fix the problem.

So heading into Oscars weekend, we’ve combed through them to give you the individual stats — and the big picture. It goes far beyond #OscarsSoWhite.

Here are some of the key findings from recent studies by The Washington Post; Directors Guild of America; UCLA; the Media, Diversity & Social Change Initiative; The Wall Street Journal; San Diego State University’s Center for the Study of Women in Film & Television; and USA Today:

Gender

1. 89 percent of the Academy’s director’s branch is male, as is 87 percent of its executives branch. (Washington Post)

2. Four of the 435 Academy Awards nominations for Best Director since 1927 have gone to women. Kathryn Bigelow is the only one to ever win. (Washington Post)

11. In 2012-13, women were outnumbered 2-to-1 among film leads, 8-to-1 among film directors, and 4-to-1 among film writers. (UCLA’s Bunche Center)

12. On TV, women were outnumbered nearly 2-to-1 in leading roles, nearly 2-to-1 among creators of broadcast scripted shows, more than 2-to-1 among creators of cable scripted shows and more than 4-to-1 among the creators of digital series. (Bunche Center)

35. White series creators outnumbered minority series creators more than 6-to-1 on broadcast TV, more than 3-to-1 on cable, and more than 7-to-1 on digital platforms and in syndication. (Bunche Center)